biopiracy: ipr solutions for developing nations and their indigenous groups
TRANSCRIPT
Biopiracy: IPR Solutions for Developing Nations and their Indigenous Groups
Andrea Scanlan
University of Idaho
Martin Institute of International Studies
IS 495: Senior Seminar
White Paper
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I. Background and History of Biopiracy and Indigenous Intellectual Property Rights
The ethnobotanical and traditional knowledge of indigenous cultures holds great potential
for economic profit and social benefit. Occasionally the pursuit of this economic benefit leads to
exploitation or unfair distribution of the benefits of biodiversity and traditional knowledge. The
term biopiracy originated from a small group of NGO’s, especially the Rural Advancement
Foundation International, who were concerned about the economic consequences of outside use
of both biodiversity found in indigenous regions and the unapproved use of their traditional
knowledge on the subject.1
Biopiracy is an offshoot of bioprospecting, a practice that, in itself, should not hold any
specific threats to indigenous intellectual property rights (IPR). Bioprospecting refers to the “set
of practices which seek to identify, conserve, capitalize upon and share the benefits of the genetic
resources (and the traditional knowledge of their use)”2 However, when the process goes wrong,
it can lead to biopiracy and unlawful or unfair extraction of resources. Biopiracy “brings together
in one term the ambivalent promises that emerge at the intersection of science, nature and
intellectual property rights.” 3.
Acts of biopiracy often fall into gray areas of the law and legal conventions. Biopiracy
definitions vary depending on the source, but most have the basic acknowledgement that outside
entities have appropriated the intellectual or biological property of a region without their prior
informed consent. 4
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1 Hamilton, Chris. "‘Biopiracy’ as a Challenge to Intellectual Property Rights Systems."Development 49.4 (2006): 95. Print.
2 Hamilton “‘Biopiracy’ as a Challenge” p.95
3 Hamilton “‘Biopiracy’ as a Challenge” p. 94
4 Hamilton, Chris. "Biodiversity, Biopiracy And Benefits: What Allegations Of Biopiracy Tell Us About Intellectual Property." Developing World Bioethics 0.0 (2006): 061004045703002-??? Print.
Biopiracy, at the most basic level is simply theft of resources or biodiversity. The next
level includes the use of cultural and traditional knowledge without permission from the
originator. At its most abstract, economic biopiracy can occur when “domestic and international
markets are usurped through the use of trade names and IPRs, thereby destroying local
economies and national economies where the innovation took place, thereby wiping out the
livelihoods and economic survival of millions.”5
One of the main criticisms of current IPR laws and their relation to biopiracy is their
euro-american slant. Critics claim that this prevents them from taking into account the nuances
of indigenous traditional knowledge and the rights that they ought to have. Current laws and
resolutions on Biopiracy and its regulations are mainly contained in the Trade Related Aspects of
Intellectual Property (TRIPS) declaration, World Intellectual (WIPO) organization writings, the
Convention on Biodiversity (CBD), World Trade Organization agreements (WTO) and any
national laws or institutions like the US Patent office. 6
Biopiracy of indigenous knowledge and biodiversity carries with it a number of moral
and ethical dilemmas.7 Additionally, even with attempts to mitigate these dilemmas, the benefits
are often impossible to allocate fairly or not shared at all.8 Most measurably, biopiracy can affect
traditional users by bidding up the price of resources. It is a severe infringement on property
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5 Shiva, Vandana. Protect or Plunder?: Understanding Intellectual Property Rights. London: Zed, 2001. Print.
6 Mathur, Ajeet. "Who Owns Traditional Knowledge?" Economic and Political Weekly38.42 (2003): 4471-481. Print. P. 4471
7 Visser, Coenraad J. "Making Intellectual Property Laws Work For Traditional Knowledge." Poor People's Knowledge: Promoting Intellectual Property in Developing Countries. By J. M. Finger and Philip Schuler. [Washington, D.C.]: Copublication of the World Bank and Oxford UP, 2004. 207-40. Print. P. 217.
8 Schuler, Philip. "Biopiracy and Commercialization of Ethnobotanical Knowledge." Poor People's Knowledge: Promoting Intellectual Property in Developing Countries. By J. M. Finger. [Washington, D.C.]: Copublication of the World Bank and Oxford UP, 2004. Print. P. 160
rights when traditional users not only lack the economic profit from their traditional knowledge,
but also are prevented from using it themselves.9
II. Possible Solutions:
National Sui Generis Systems
Sui generis systems are those that are specifically tailored to changing circumstances that
are unforeseeable when the law is drafted. They have flexibility to adapt to changes built into
their legal terms. The current system of IPR laws exist in a vacuum that fails to take into account
changing categories or classifications of intellectual property. By adopting a sui generis system,
IPR could be more adaptable to fit changing and nuanced systems. “Unlike ‘mainstream’
intellectual property law––which historically has been associated with the advancement of
commercial concerns––this new movement favoring recognition and protection of more general
forms of knowledge has its roots in human rights, labor and environmental law”10. This system
has the potential to solve some of IPR laws’ problems with unbalanced allocation of rights to
developed countries. However most of the current legal structures in place (especially
internationally) are not well suited to change to sui generis systems. This makes necessary the
promotion of national laws that can interact with current property law systems.11 Without any
IPR protection, biological resources were considered the common heritage of mankind but many
countries did not reap any economic benefit. Ajeet Mathur emphasizes that “new biodeiversity
laws in developing countries make ‘prior informed consent’ of the government a precondition to
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9 Schuler, P. 165
10 Halewood, Michael. "Indigenous and Local Knowledge in International Law: A Preface to Sui Generis Intellectual Property Protection." McGill Law Journal 44.953 (1999). Print. P. 955
11 Halewood, p. 957
the export of biological resources”.12 International systems have neither capability nor the
authority to create such laws and to adapt in a timely manner to changing circumstances.
National sui generis IPR laws could fill the gap between the needs of developing countries and
the capabilities of current international law to meet them.
Eliminate patentability of plants:
Traditional knowledge, which according to WIPO can refer to any knowledge that
pertains to “science, technology, agriculture, the environment, medicine, environmental
biodiversity, expressions of folklore, and so on”13 is considered to be the common heritage of
mankind. It receives this definition from WIPO and the Convention on Biological Diversity.
Many critics assert that since the incalculable wealth of traditional knowledge, and the plants it
pertains to, goes back thousands of years and was developed by communities around the globe, it
“is and has always been a collective an public wealth, managed by local communities for the
benefit of humanity.”14 Revoking patents on life could reduce the misappropriation of benefits
and the exploitation of traditional knowledge and biological resources by developed countries.15
If no one is able to patent biological resources, the benefits can be shared by all those who have
developed them or encounter them. Often, “for many campaigning against biopiracy, it is not
who owns [patents on life] but that [they] are owned at all that matters.”16 Patents are supposed
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12 Mathur, p. 4476
13 Bodeker, Gerard. "Traditional Medical Knowledge, Intellectual Property Rights and Benefit Sharing." Cardozo Journal of International and Comparative Law 11.2 (2003). Print.
14 Hamilton, “Biodiversity, Biopiracy and Benefits” p. 172
15 Shuler, p. 177
16 Hamilton, “Biodiversity, Biopiracy and Benefits” p. 172
to protect individual knowledge so that it may be used for the public good. Patenting traditional
knowledge does the opposite––taking information out of the public domain so that individuals
can benefit from it.
Reforms for IPRs in Developed Nations
As the system currently operates in many developed countries, patents are far too quick to
be granted. They have moved away from extensive examination of patents before approval
toward an adversarial process to dispute patents after they are already granted.17 Patent law must
consider the novelty and prior use of a product or technology before it is approved. As Vandana
Shiva makes clear, “If a patent system fails to honestly apply criteria of novelty and non-
obviousness in the granting of patents related to indigenous knowledge, then the system is
flawed and needs to change.”18 It should be a concern not only because of the blatant disregard
for the facts shown by the USTPO and other large, developed-country patent offices, but also
because the process of contesting patents is arduous and expensive and therefore not one easily
undertaken by developing countries. Patent offices need to take initiative to ensure that the
investigation of patents is done before granting patents instead of granting them quickly and
leaving any heavy research to post-award litigators.19 Patent offices effectively shirk any
responsibility to create conditions for fairness and transparency in the patent process. Reforms
need to be made to ensure that every possible effort is made to ascertain the origin and originator
of potential patents before they enter into law.
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17 Shuler p. 176
18 Shiva, p. 62
19 Schuler, p. 176
Create knowledge-sharing contracts
Knowledge sharing contracts have the potential to balance the needs of two parties
involved in the biopiracy and traditional knowledge debate. The landmark initiative by Merck
and the Costa Rican National Biodiversity Institute (INBio) was an agreement to share biological
samples and information with potential for pharmaceutical development in exchange for staff
training at Merck facilities, one million US dollars in compensation over a two year period,
$130,000 of laboratory equipment for use at the University of Costa Rica and royalties on any
pharmaceuticals developed. The Merck/INBio agreement can serve as a model to other countries
of a program that addresses several problems and is a collaborative effort, not just a bilateral
business undertaking.20 Several aspects of the agreement should be highlighted as a guide for
other countries. Firstly, the testing and research of samples is all done in Costa Rica. This creates
local awareness and involvement for future developments. 21Additionally, Costa Ricans retain
rights to all samples collected and databases compiled, giving them power in future negotiations.
22 The royalties agreement specifies that Costa Rica shall receive 3% of worldwide sales. In
theory, this will prevent Costa Ricans from being exploited and reduces mistrust by clearly
spelling out the benefits and requirements of the agreement.23
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20 Zebich-Knos, M. "Preserving Biodiversity in Costa Rica: The Case of the Merck-INBio Agreement." The Journal of Environment & Development 6.2 (1997): 180-86. Print.
21 Ragavan, Srividhya. "New Paradigms for Protection of Biodiversity." Journal of Intellectual Property Rights 13 (2008): 514-22. Print. P. 517
22 Ragavan, 518
23 Ragavan 518
Empower communities to negotiate within national and international frameworks
There is general agreement that IPRs have failed to protect groups in the periphery from
exploitation. One solution is to sensitize these populations––without encouraging or
discouraging adoption of the global North’s system––to the realities of the current IPR system in
dominance internationally.24 Fostering greater understanding of IPR frameworks and procedures
is the best way to encourage greater indigenous participation in global and domestic policy
making. Just as it is vital that the developed world understand the differences in indigenous
conception of IPRs, indigenous groups will benefit greatly from a more complete understanding
of the North’s conception of traditional knowledge, culture and property. Once this is in place,
they will be able to better identify the needs of their populations with regards to international
policies.25 Currently many poorer countries and marginalized groups within them are unaware of
what needs to be patented, how to go about it and give uninformed consent to other parties to
claim IPRs within their borders. By sending the right people to the negotiating table, developing
countries can be better equipped to deal with the legal battles that inevitably take place in
international negotiations.26 Empowerment for negotiation starts with sensitization to the issues
through education and its effects would be threefold: it would give populations the information
necessary to make informed decisions on resource access, strengthen development by clarifying
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24 Staral, Johanna M., and Jean M. Sekerak. "Fighting Biopiracy at the Source: Sensitivizing Indigenous Communities to Westernized Intellectual Property Rights and the Threat of Biopiracy." Case Western Reserve University School of Law. Print. 2012.
25 Staral, 2012
26 Lawrence, S., and J. Skordis. "Practical Strategies to Combat Biopiracy." The Lancet363.9403 (2004): 166. Print.
the role of IPRs in protecting and compensating resource owners, and give target populations a
voice in international negotiations.27
Improve benefit sharing
Benefit sharing is a primary component of the Convention on Biodiversity and with
improvements could reduce the damaging effects of biopiracy. The CBD addresses benefit-
sharing generally by emphasizing the need for “fair and equitable sharing of benefits” in Article
1. It then becomes more specific in Article 16 by promoting technology transfer as a form of
benefit sharing and in Article 19 by explaining the fair handling of benefits of biotechnology
research between developed and developing countries. Overall, benefit-sharing arguments focus
on the need for prior informed consent (PIC) and mutually agreed terms (MAT).28 However,
beyond these vague requirements, interpretations vary on how they should be implemented
anywhere from royalties, upfront payments, milestone payments, rewards to transfer of
biotechnology. 29 Ultimately, if biopiracy is misallocation of benefits from biodiversity resources,
then it stands to reason that the solution would be the creation of frameworks for equitable
allocation of resources and their benefits. This could be achieved by requiring those applying for
patents to prove very clearly where the knowledge they are using originated from and
demonstrate the prior informed consent of the originator while showing that benefit sharing
proposals have been negotiated and agreed upon.30 While the practical implications of creating
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27 Staral, 2012
28 Sampath, Padmashree Gehl. Regulating Bioprospecting: Institutions for Drug Research, Access, and Benefit-sharing. Tokyo: United Nations UP, 2005. Print. P. 39
29 Sampath, p 177
30 Hamilton, “Biodiversity, Biopiracy and Benefits” p. 169
functional benefit-sharing frameworks are daunting, the solution does address many of the most
damaging social and economic effects of biopiracy. If it were possible to improve the
implementation of benefit-sharing agreements it would show a great deal of promise in
compensating all parties involved in bioprospecting and biotechnology enterprises.
Traditional Resource Rights
For many indigenous groups, IPRs present a danger to their way of life, cultural
expression and the biodiversity on which they often depend. Traditional resource rights are a part
of “an integrated rights concept that recognizes the inextricable link between cultural and
biological diversity and sees no contradiction between the human rights of indigenous and local
communities, including the right to development and environmental conservation.”31 Many
proponents of the development TRRs assert that IPRs are not an effective mechanism to achieve
indigenous empowerment. As an alternative to the usual top-down development structure, they
propose TRRs to more appropriately address the issue at hand instead of trying to fit the complex
politics and nuances of indigenous property into the framework of established IPRs.32
International law does not really exist in this area, and what does address it only touches on the
issues at hand. TRRs would prevent the privatization and commoditization of communally
shared concepts and property. Often, TRRs make sense because the use of IPR and patents in
these areas is not only incomprehensible for the originators of knowledge, but impossible in
many cases since their traditional knowledge dates back generations.
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31 Posey, Darrell Addison, and Graham Dutfield. Beyond Intellectual Property: Toward Traditional Resource Rights for Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities. Ottawa: International Development Research Centre, 1996. Print.
32 Posey, Darrell Addison. "Indigenous Peoples and Traditional Resource Rights: A Basis for Equitable Relationships." Reading. Workshop on Indigenous Peoples and Traditional Resource Rights. Green College Centre for Environmental Policy and Understanding. University of Oxford. 28 June 1995. Web.
Knowledge databases to prove prior use
Much of the contention that comes with biopiracy allegations and patent litigation stems
from a lack of documentation of the original owner or innovator of indigenous traditional
knowledge or biodiversity. Knowledge databases are one tool that can help minimize the
uncertainty of ownership of traditional knowledge and biodiversity. Knowledge databases are
developed for a number of reasons, sometimes by libraries, archives or anthropologists and
sometimes by indigenous groups themselves to prevent their knowledge from being used without
acknowledgement. Recording knowledge so it exists as documentation allows for the possibility
of cross-checking claims and proving prior existence.33 Reasons in support of knowledge
databases are numerous, including the potential to preserve indigenous knowledge and property
and protect against its loss. This can be done by ensuring IPR protections of indigenous
knowledge. Enhancing recognition of IK by sharing it with outsiders has the potential to benefit
humanity greatly while still preserving indigenous culture.34 An example of a fairly successful
global registration system is India’s Traditional Knowledge Digital Library which holds over
36,000 formulations from Ayurvedic medicinal practice and features categories to facilitate the
links between traditional formulations and proposed patents. Creating knowledge databases as a
defensive intellectual property strategy will prove to be an integral step to prove prior existence35
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33 Anderson, Jane. Indigenous/Traditional Knowledge & Intellectual Property. Duke University School of Law, 2010. Durham, NC: Center for the Study of the Public Domain, 2010. Print.
34 Tagle, Yovana Reyes. "The Protection of Indigenous Knowledge Related to Biodiversity: The Role of Databases." SYLFF (2007): 131-45. Print.
35 Anderson, 2010
and prevent misappropriation of indigenous intellectual property.36 However, it will be vital that
these databases address who owns the database and the information in it and whether these
owners are different entities.
III. Recommended course of action:
Start with negotiation at the national level and move towards sui generis in IPR laws
internationally
Given the unyielding nature of current IPR laws and the cultural and representational
differences that prevent real change for indigenous populations, the short term solution would be
to promote indigenous negotiation training and education so that they can assert their rights
within the already established framework. Since the “current global framework is entrenched,
and it might be more effective to make the system work for the disadvantaged while civil society
takes on the larger task of reforming the system altogether.”37 If indigenous groups and
developing countries, the main parties negatively affected by biopiracy and intellectual property
rights failures, were to send the right people to the negotiating table, they would be more capable
of navigating the “legal minefield”38 that IPR negotiation can be.
We see this functioning well in several instances, including a set of trade talks in Cancún,
Mexico in September of 2003. Negotiators were trained in the skills necessary to participate and
assert their rights in negotiations and the level of preparedness surprised many.39
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36 Tagle, 2007
37 Lawrence, 2004
38 Lawrence, 2004
39 Lawrence, 2004
Sensitizing target populations to the nuances of negotiation not only assists them in their
efforts in international organization but it could help create an atmosphere of change in national
legal systems, bringing about the possibility of much needed reforms to IPR laws.40 If affected
groups are empowered to negotiate within the national framework, their needs are more likely to
be given a place in the national agenda. As more attention is paid at the national level, the
international level could follow.
Thus, the long term solution must first begin with short term assertion of rights on the
part of the marginalized groups that are in need. The process towards a sui generis system of
laws to regulate intellectual property and prevent misappropriation of resources must begin with
national systems of rights and obligations. Once these systems are put into place, it would be
more likely that they could be reflected in international law.
The final step in the process from national negotiation to international law would be the
eventual harmonization of the current international policies and guidelines currently in place.
Once national frameworks have been established, it stands to reason that international laws
should be tailored to mirror states’ needs. TRIPS, the CBD and WIPO policies will need to be
reevaluated and move toward a sui generis structure as well. Since international policy is slow to
react to changing circumstances, the built-in flexibility and adaptability of sui generis would
prove to have greater longevity and functionality in the long run.41
The development of sui generis law system could “establish a bridge between [the]
indigenous/local community and national and international legal systems, in order to secure the
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40 Staral, 2012
41 Sampath, p. 4480
effective recognition and protection of rights which derive from customary law and practice.”42
If indigenous groups and developing countries can move towards a system in which they do not
have to continually attempt to translate their needs for intellectual property rights into an
inappropriate system, issues of biopiracy and other related problems will become manageable.
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42 Anderson, 2010 p. 34
Additional Works Consulted:
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Brown, Michael F. Who Owns Native Culture? Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 2003. Print.
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Microbiology 2.3 (1999): 236-40. Print.
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